Skogsgurra
Electrical
- Mar 31, 2003
- 11,815
"Always check insulation before connecting to mains!"
This is in the bone marrow of most electricians. Some use a Megger, some use an ohmmeter. The latter method is not quite what I would call checking the insulation - but it has one advantage: it doesn't kill anything.
"A 500 V or 1000 V Megger doesn't either", I can hear someone say. "But you should connect all phases, and neutral, too. Then you are safe..."
Am I? I remember a paper machine drive back in the seventies. A distributed installation with miles of cables. The capacitance of all these cables combined was in the close to one microfarad range. So when the guy that cranked the Megger saw a quite low resistance, but increasing, he thought that something was wrong with the Megger.
I told him to crank on and voltage rised slowly. And then resistance fell to zero. There had been a flash-over somewhere in the plant. God knew where. New cranking and new flash-over. I stopped the excersise and we did a separate check on the high amp circuits to make sure that the flash-over didn't happen there.
The machine was started and I went to the hotel for a much-coveted night's sleep.
The phone rang just as I had fallen asleep. There was something wrong in the machine. I went there again to have a look. There was a little free-wheeling diode across a relay coil that was dead short. And there were traces of a flash-over between coil pin and chassis (yes, relays were monted in sockets that were monted in metal chassis at that time). So, know we were two to know.
We had been very careful. We had tied everything together. But that doesn't help when the whole system capacitance decides to discharge through a tiny diode. A few volts would have been OK, but we probably were close to 1000 V this time.
So. Whatever the "specialists" say about meggering and what little harm it does "if you do it right": DO NOT LET THEM DO IT! The distance between live parts and grounded parts is not any greater today - I would say probably smaller.
Next thing to consider: What shall the insulation resistance be? What is an acceptable level? What do the different Codes say?
I have had this discussion so many times. So I leave it open for you to join in. The European codes usually say that the resistance shall be Ux1000 ohms, where U is system voltage. An industrial installation with lots of inverters and other electronic loads connected to a 690 V grid should thus have a 690 kohm insulation resistance. Which is absurd.
How do you handle these things? Do you measure one wire at a time or do you measure all wires connected? Do you measure with load connected or do you measure "between fuses" i.e. one shrt piece of wire at a time? And what limits do you use?
It is about time that we bring some order to this swamp. Please help!
Gunnar Englund
This is in the bone marrow of most electricians. Some use a Megger, some use an ohmmeter. The latter method is not quite what I would call checking the insulation - but it has one advantage: it doesn't kill anything.
"A 500 V or 1000 V Megger doesn't either", I can hear someone say. "But you should connect all phases, and neutral, too. Then you are safe..."
Am I? I remember a paper machine drive back in the seventies. A distributed installation with miles of cables. The capacitance of all these cables combined was in the close to one microfarad range. So when the guy that cranked the Megger saw a quite low resistance, but increasing, he thought that something was wrong with the Megger.
I told him to crank on and voltage rised slowly. And then resistance fell to zero. There had been a flash-over somewhere in the plant. God knew where. New cranking and new flash-over. I stopped the excersise and we did a separate check on the high amp circuits to make sure that the flash-over didn't happen there.
The machine was started and I went to the hotel for a much-coveted night's sleep.
The phone rang just as I had fallen asleep. There was something wrong in the machine. I went there again to have a look. There was a little free-wheeling diode across a relay coil that was dead short. And there were traces of a flash-over between coil pin and chassis (yes, relays were monted in sockets that were monted in metal chassis at that time). So, know we were two to know.
We had been very careful. We had tied everything together. But that doesn't help when the whole system capacitance decides to discharge through a tiny diode. A few volts would have been OK, but we probably were close to 1000 V this time.
So. Whatever the "specialists" say about meggering and what little harm it does "if you do it right": DO NOT LET THEM DO IT! The distance between live parts and grounded parts is not any greater today - I would say probably smaller.
Next thing to consider: What shall the insulation resistance be? What is an acceptable level? What do the different Codes say?
I have had this discussion so many times. So I leave it open for you to join in. The European codes usually say that the resistance shall be Ux1000 ohms, where U is system voltage. An industrial installation with lots of inverters and other electronic loads connected to a 690 V grid should thus have a 690 kohm insulation resistance. Which is absurd.
How do you handle these things? Do you measure one wire at a time or do you measure all wires connected? Do you measure with load connected or do you measure "between fuses" i.e. one shrt piece of wire at a time? And what limits do you use?
It is about time that we bring some order to this swamp. Please help!
Gunnar Englund